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Cell division in eukaryotic cells involves mitosis, which is the division of the replicated chromosomes into two identical sets, and cytokinesis, which is the division of the cytoplasm.
Answerchromosomes are found mostly in the nucleus of your cells and there is where you will find the chromosomes.
New Q. Answer is Yes. Remember, eukaryotic chromosomes exist in pairs.Ex-Q. Answer was: about meiosis and mitosis I will answer both:Mitosis is a form of cell division that results in the produced (or daughter) cells having the same number of chromosomes as the parent. In your example, a daughter cell resulting from mitotic cell division would have 23 chromosome pairs, just like its parent cell.Meiosis is a form of cell division that results in the produced (or daughter) cells having half the number of chromosomes present in the parent. In your example, a daughter cell resulting from meiotic cell division would have 23 chromosomes, half the number of the parent cell.
if a cell has 64 chromosomes together, all the offspring cells will have 64 chromosomes each.
They show chromosomes at the point when cell division is about to occur because the chromosomes are condensed and aligned which makes it easy to tell if there are the correct number and configurations of the chromosomes.
mieosis.
mieosis.
meiosis
mieosis.
Cell division in eukaryotic cells involves mitosis, which is the division of the replicated chromosomes into two identical sets, and cytokinesis, which is the division of the cytoplasm.
If it is mitotic division the sets of chromosomes in each cell will be 2n.
Answerchromosomes are found mostly in the nucleus of your cells and there is where you will find the chromosomes.
Mitosis is the process in which a eukaryotic cell separates its chromosomes into the nuclei of two identical cells. Meiosis is the process of cell division of a zygote in a eukaryotic-cellular organism.
what is the nuclear division in eukaryotic cells in which each cell receives a copy of the original chromosomes
In eukaryotic cells chromosomes are found within the nucleus. The only exception to this is during mitosis (i.e. cell division) when the nuclear membrane disappears and the chromosomes line up at the metaphase plate and then move towards opposite direction in anaphase. Reaching the telophase these are again surrounded by the nuclear envelop.
The organelle that is involved in cell division in animal cells is known as the centrioles.
In a normal eukaryotic cell which is not actively dividing, chromosomes are not visible. The DNA is loosely coiled, dispersed through the nucleoplasm. However, during cell division, the DNA condenses into ordered structures called chromosomes, which are visible under the microscope.